Similar words: in terms of, come to terms with, term, long-term, short-term, permit, German, fisherman. Meaning: [tɜrm /tɜːm] n. 1. status with respect to the relations between people or groups 2. the amount of money needed to purchase something.
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121. He's talking in terms of starting a completely new career.
122. Students have less money in relative terms, but spend more on books.
123. This law will help small businesses to compete on equal terms with large multinational corporations.
124. The average value of salaries has fallen in real terms .
125. He is barely on speaking terms with his father .
126. The new centre-right government's radical objectives are often couched in moderate terms.
127. She told him in no uncertain terms to go away.
128. It's a mistake to think of Florida only in terms of its tourist attractions.
129. Many people think that an honest politician is a contradiction in terms.
130. The difficulty of a problem was defined in terms of how long it took to complete.
131. Employers are entitled to insist that employees honour the terms of their agreement.
132. She is still coming to terms with her son's death.
133. The client should understand, in broad terms ,[http://sentencedict.com/terms.html] the likely cost of the case.
134. The oldest president in American history had stayed the course for two terms.
135. Does any significance attach to the use of the technical terms?
136. The matter, they decided, lay outside the commission's terms of reference.
137. He felt he had been trapped into accepting the terms of the contract.
138. The two were said to have been on first-name terms.
139. Canada has much to offer in terms of location and climate.
140. I told him in no uncertain terms what I thought of his behaviour.
141. The UN Security Council has linked any lifting of sanctions to compliance with the ceasefire terms.
142. The chairman spoke of the achievements of the company in glowing terms.
143. Paris has played a dominant role in France(sentencedict.com), not just in political terms but also in economic power.
144. They haven't been on speaking terms since they had that big row.
145. Hazlitt, though much younger, was soon disputing with Wordsworth on equal terms.
146. Whatever the objections to this sort of treatment, the gains in terms of the number of lives saved are substantial.
147. We let them know in no uncertain terms just how disappointed we were.
148. If you don't understand what the doctor says, ask to have it explained in layman's terms .
149. Speaking through an interpreter, the president said the terms of the ceasefire were completely unacceptable.
150. These teaching methods are too costly in terms of staff resources.
More similar words: in terms of, come to terms with, term, long-term, short-term, permit, German, fisherman, permission, undermine, never mind, supermarket, furthermore, bewilderment, outer, later, alter, water, meter, after, letter, voter, poster, latter, terror, mutter, oyster, filter, foster, hunter.